Business in Action, 9th Ed.
Appendix C: Information Technology
View the sample reports at examples.
"Before, entrepreneurs would usually pay more attention to their gut rather than trust data.
Jennifer Frost has the infographic at GrammarCheck.
Alison Green (photo, left) answers a question from a reader who is struggling with her office's open floor plan.
"Identify what works for your specific needs.
"Every webpage you visit, your online purchases, the songs you listen to on the internet, pages you follow on Facebook or any likes you leave under posts on social media create your digital footprint, which is a gold mine of information about you, information that can be used to influence your behavior.
From an introduction to job-search strategies to details on résumé writing, you’ll find advice from career counseling professionals.
These online tools (many are free) offer a variety of ways to create infographics.
The 1000-plus pages of advice in the Chicago Manual of Style for citations and other writing and formatting questions can be overwhelming, but the editors are here to help.
The FTC’s Business Center has helpful guidance on applying federal marketing regulations in a wide variety of specific situations.
"Businesses can only operate as effectively as they can communicate.
"Research needs and requirements vary with each assignment, project or paper.
A handy reference tool web landing page from North Carolina State University.
From refining your goals to measuring your success, here’s how to get started.
Whether you’re starting your first document or using Word’s advanced capabilities, this site can help.
"We feel that technology is bad, while it actually isn't.
"Many artificial intelligence researchers expect AI to outsmart humans at all tasks and jobs within decades, enabling a future where we're restricted only by the laws of physics, not the limits of our intelligence.
"AI is one of the hottest topics in the technology world today.
"As a research scientist at Google, Margaret Mitchell helps develop computers that can communicate about what they see and understand.
"Machine learning is on the verge of seriously impacting workplace communications.
"When it comes to digital infrastructure and the relationship we have with it, it feels as if we’re at an important crossroads right now.
"Artificial intelligence (AI) is already becoming entrenched in many facets of everyday life, and is being tapped for a growing array of core business applications, including
predicting market and customer behavior, automating repetitive tasks and providing alerts when things go awry.
"We already live among robots: tools and machines like dishwashers and thermostats so integrated into our lives that we'd never think to call them that.
"Rebecca Greenfield covers the workplace for Bloomberg.